Trinity came out of the traps flying in the second half and began to dominate possession alongside territory.

Alfreton struggled to get to grips with particularly Jarman and Yates down the right hand side, where most of the Blues danger was coming from.

Jarman hit the roof of the net from 40 yards after spotting the keeper off his line before Yates picked out Picton in the box to head over the bar.

In the 64th minute, Picton got his goal though as two of the unlikeliest sources in the team, combined to full effect for Trinity.

Josh Lacey hit a long diagonal ball into the box which seemed to elude everyone, until the unmarked Picton appeared out of nowhere and expertly volleyed home.

It was the goal the game had been craving and it was what looked like the match winner for Gainsborough.

The only chance the visitors had in an attempt to get back in the game was a deflected header which had Budtz scared for a while, as Alfreton ran out of what little creative they had had in the first half.

Unfortunately, football is not game where the best team always wins and when Nyoni was brought down in the box, Bradley dispatched the penalty to equalise with the last kick of the game.